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As U.S.-backed negotiations between Russia and Ukraine in Geneva ended without a breakthrough, Kyiv made gains on the battlefield, recapturing territory at its fastest pace in years through localized counterattacks along the southeastern front.

The advances come as analysts point to disruptions in Russian battlefield communications and shifting operational dynamics, developments that could strengthen Ukraine’s leverage even as talks remain stalled.

Ukrainian forces retook about 78 square miles over five days, according to a report by Agence France-Presse based on an analysis of the Institute for the Study of War battlefield mapping. The gains represent Kyiv’s most rapid territorial advances since its 2023 counteroffensive in the Donetsk and Zaporizhzhia regions.

Retired Air Force Lt. Gen. Richard Newton said Ukraine’s battlefield performance should not be underestimated. ‘As this war grinds on, the world too often forgets that Ukraine’s determination, innovation and moral clarity are force multipliers. Its ability to defend against a larger, better-resourced enemy should never be counted out,’ Newton told Fox News Digital. ‘There are growing signs that Russia’s supposed invincibility is no longer a safe assumption, particularly as pressure increases on the Kremlin and its partners.’

The fighting has centered east of Zaporizhzhia, where Russian forces have steadily advanced since mid-2025. Open-source battlefield monitoring and mapping indicate Ukrainian troops pushed forward around Huliaipole and nearby settlements, though analysts caution the front remains fluid, and some areas are not fully secured, The Telegraph reported.

The Institute for the Study of War assessed in mid-February that the counterattacks appear to be exploiting disruptions in Russian command-and-control. ISW said Ukrainian forces are likely leveraging limits affecting Russian battlefield communications, including reported restrictions tied to the use of Starlink satellite terminals and messaging platforms cited in open-source reporting.

Analysts say reduced connectivity can create short windows for Ukrainian units to move through contested zones that are typically dominated by drone surveillance and electronic warfare. ISW and other observers emphasize that such opportunities are temporary and do not signal a broader collapse in Russian defenses.

The evolving fight is also shaped by the growing role of drones. In a Feb. 10 special report, ISW said Russia’s expanding use of first-person-view drones reflects a campaign to ‘weaponize and institutionalize intentional civilian harm as a purposeful tool of war,’ warning the tactic is becoming embedded in operational doctrine and could influence future conflicts.

Despite the recent gains, analysts caution against viewing the developments as a decisive shift in the war. Newton argued that sustained Western military support remains essential. ‘Putin responds to force,’ he said. ‘The United States and Europe should continue providing Ukraine with both defensive and offensive capabilities, including long-range systems capable of striking deep inside Russia.’

Retired Vice Adm. Robert S. Harward said battlefield gains are increasingly tied to diplomacy. ‘Both sides are trying to use battlefield advances to strengthen their position at the negotiating table,’ Harward said. ‘It’s a sign neither side is ready to strike a deal yet.’

Harward pointed to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s stated willingness to hold elections following a ceasefire as evidence Kyiv is signaling flexibility, while Moscow continues to press its demands. ‘If a lasting and fair diplomatic agreement is achievable, the current U.S. team is well-positioned to help deliver it,’ he said. ‘But negotiations must be paired with sustained pressure on Russia and its partners.’

Nearly two years after Ukraine’s last major offensive stalled, the war remains defined by incremental territorial changes rather than sweeping breakthroughs. Both sides continue to rely heavily on drones, artillery and electronic warfare, with front lines shifting village by village.

‘As U.S.-led talks continue, it is critical to increase pressure on Putin to end the war on terms that restore deterrence and prevent further aggression,’ Newton said.

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As the possibility of U.S. military action against Iran looms, former Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene asserted in a post on X that Americans do not want the U.S. to wage war against the Islamic Republic.

‘Americans do not want to go to war with Iran!!!’ Greene exclaimed in the post.

‘They want to be able to afford their lives and get ahead. They want to be happy and enjoy life. They want their government to put elite pedos in jail. And they voted for NO MORE FOREIGN WARS AND NO MORE REGIME CHANGE,’ she added.

Fox News Digital reached out to the White House for comment.

Greene, who had previously been a longtime, staunch supporter of President Donald Trump’s, had a major falling out with the president last year and left office early last month in the middle of her House term.

Trump has been pressuring Iran to make a deal to give up its nuclear weapons ambitions.

After meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu last week, Trump said in a Truth Social post that he ‘insisted that negotiations with Iran continue to see whether or not a Deal can be consummated.’

‘If it can, I let the Prime Minister know that will be a preference,’ he wrote.

‘If it cannot, we will just have to see what the outcome will be. Last time Iran decided that they were better off not making a Deal, and they were hit with Midnight Hammer — That did not work well for them. Hopefully this time they will be more reasonable and responsible,’ Trump declared in the post.

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Senate Republicans are hoping to move full steam ahead on Trump-backed voter ID legislation, but there’s one problem — the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is still shut down.

Though negotiations between Senate Democrats and the White House are still ongoing, albeit at a molasses-like pace, there is no clear sign that a deal will be struck before lawmakers return to Washington, D.C., next week.

Reopening the agency will be front and center in the Senate, meaning other priorities, like the Safeguarding American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) America Act, will be sidelined.

Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, who has led the charge in the Senate to build support around the SAVE America Act, hoped the bill would be on the floor as soon as the day after President Donald Trump’s State of the Union address next week.

But he acknowledged that ending the partial shutdown would likely take precedence.

‘That’s the problem with taking a weeklong recess when they’ve shut down not just a department, but an entire department — and a particularly big department,’ Lee said.

‘That’s valuable time lost. As far as the objective of getting us to turn to this next week shortly after we get back, that seems less possible in light of the fact that that happened,’ he continued.

Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., guaranteed that the voter ID legislation would get a vote. It’s just a matter of when, given the uncertainty surrounding DHS.

‘My job is to try and do the best to ensure that we’re making the most, doing, getting the most we can out of the opportunity we have here,’ Thune told Fox News Digital.

The SAVE America Act is riding high on a fresh wave of momentum in the Senate, with 50 Republicans, including Thune, backing it. That means it can move through at least one key procedural hurdle.

‘If we’re still in a shutdown, that obviously will have some bearing on what we decide, how we decide to schedule the floor,’ he continued.

The most valuable asset in the upper chamber is floor time, given the number of procedural hoops any legislation or nominee has to jump through to get passed or confirmed.

And one of the first actions lawmakers will take when they return — unless a deal is struck between now and Monday — is to again vote on a full-year DHS funding bill, according to the current floor schedule in the upper chamber.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and nearly every Senate Democrat blocked that bill and a short-term funding extension before lawmakers left town last week.

Trump told reporters earlier this week that the current DHS closure was a ‘Democrat shutdown, Republicans have nothing to do with it.’

He also suggested that Democrats were in their shutdown posture because, among other issues, they rejected voter ID and proof of citizenship to vote. 

‘If you have voter ID, if you have proof of citizenship, they could never get elected, and they know that,’ Trump said. 

There are other issues in the Senate that need attention, too, Thune noted. Confirming more of Trump’s judicial nominees and putting a raft of bipartisan housing legislation that passed through the House on the floor are top of mind for the top Senate Republican.

Still, Lee was hopeful that once the DHS situation was resolved, the SAVE America Act would be next in line.

‘What I hope we’ll do is get back, turn — perhaps immediately — to DHS funding and make [Democrats] continue to vote, continue to object to unanimous consent requests to pass some kind of funding mechanism, and keep making them vote over and over again until we get something like that passed,’ Lee said. ‘And then as soon thereafter as possible, turn to SAVE America.’

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The House Oversight Committee is hearing from a billionaire on Wednesday who was named one of Jeffrey Epstein’s co-conspirators by a 2019 FBI document.

Les Wexner is the latest person to be deposed in the House’s investigation into the federal government’s handling of Epstein’s case. 

He told House investigators that he was ‘conned’ by the late pedophile and that he had no knowledge of or participation in his crimes, according to an opening statement obtained by Fox News Digital.

‘Let me state from the start: I was naïve, foolish, and gullible to put any trust in Jeffrey Epstein. He was a con man. And while I was conned, I have done nothing wrong and have nothing to hide. I completely and irrevocably cut ties with Epstein nearly twenty years ago when I learned that he was an abuser, a crook, and a liar,’ Wexner’s statement read.

‘I was never a participant nor coconspirator in any of Epstein’s illegal activities. To my enormous embarrassment and regret, I, like many others, was duped by a world-class con man. I cannot undo that part of my personal history even as I regret ever having met him.’

He also said his ‘heart goes out’ to the young women and girls who fell victim to Epstein over the years.

The billionaire fashion mogul painted himself as a husband, father, and grandfather who sought to live ‘in an ethical manner in line with my moral compass, devoting time and energy to my faith, my community, my business, my L Brands associates, and my family and friends.’

Unlike most previous depositions, committee staff and lawmakers traveled to Ohio on Wednesday morning to depose Wexner in his home state.

A spokesperson for Wexner declined to comment on whether he would invoke his Fifth Amendment right to avoid answering questions. But his insight is likely to be key to unlocking information on just how Epstein obtained his vast wealth before dying by suicide in a Manhattan jail in 2019.

The 88-year-old businessman is the founder of L Brands, formerly called The Limited, through which he acquired well-known companies Victoria’s Secret, Bath & Body Works, Express, and Abercrombie & Fitch, among others.

He was also one of Epstein’s first major clients as a financial advisor, with Epstein being granted power of attorney over Wexner’s vast wealth.

Wexner also sold his Manhattan townhouse to Epstein, which was later discovered to be one of the locations where federal authorities accused Epstein of abusing young women and girls under 18.

He told House investigators that he was introduced to Epstein in the 1980s by a fellow executive, and that two subsequent people at his former employer Bear Stearns ‘endorsed Epstein without hesitation’ as a financial advisor.

Wexner said Epstein was also ‘highly recommended’ by Elie de Rothschild for work Epstein did for his family.

‘At first, Epstein was unwilling to take me on as a client. In fact, for the first few years I was acquainted with him, Epstein offered me advice here and there while explaining that giving individual financial advice was not his focus and refusing to accept compensation. He said he was assisting me as a favor. Little did I realize that, from the very start, Epstein was conniving to gain my trust,’ Wexner said.

Wexner also claimed he began paying Epstein for his work as his wealth grew and signed over power of attorney to him while his own work was largely occupied by running his businesses. But he maintained he knew nothing of what he called Epstein’s ‘double life.’

‘He was clever, diabolical, and a master manipulator. He was meticulous in revealing to me only glimpses into the life in which he was a sophisticated financial guru who consulted with heads of state, high-ranking politicians, royalty, university presidents, professors, CEOs, musicians, and other luminaries,’ Wexner said.

‘While I did not socialize in Epstein’s social circle, he often told me about his famous acquaintances and important positions he held, and at times I experienced what seemed to be random chance encounters, probably orchestrated by Epstein, with prominent individuals who said they knew Epstein. Over the course of many years, he carefully used his acquaintance with important individuals to curate an aura of legitimacy that he then used to expand his network of acquaintances, and apparent credibility, even farther.’

Wexner said Epstein ‘fully hid’ his crimes and ‘knew that I never would have tolerated his horrible behavior,’ nor did he ever see Epstein in the company of a minor.

Wexner has never been criminally accused nor charged in relation to the late pedophile’s crimes.

A letter from Wexner to his Wexner Foundation charity dated Aug. 7, 2019, said he ended his relationship with Epstein sometime after the first federal investigation into his crimes emerged nearly 20 years ago.

Wexner also accused Epstein of misusing his vast wealth.

‘As the allegations against Mr. Epstein in Florida were emerging, he vehemently denied them. But by early fall 2007, it was agreed that he should step back from the management of our personal finances. In that process, we discovered that he had misappropriated vast sums of money from me and my family,’ read the letter, obtained by Fox News Digital on Tuesday.

‘This was, frankly, a tremendous shock, even though it clearly pales in comparison to the unthinkable allegations against him now. With his credibility and our trust in him destroyed, we immediately severed ties with him. We were able to recover some of the funds.’

Wexner is the fourth person appearing before the House Oversight Committee in its Epstein probe.

House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer, R-Ky., previously oversaw the panel through the depositions of former Trump administration Attorney General Bill Barr, ex-Trump Labor Secretary Alex Acosta, who was the U.S. attorney in Florida who signed off on Epstein’s infamous 2008 non-prosecution agreement, and convicted Epstein accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell.

Maxwell’s deposition lasted less than an hour after she invoked the Fifth Amendment, refusing to answer questions unless she was granted clemency by President Donald Trump.

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MILAN — Is this the best U.S. women’s national hockey team we’ve ever seen?

‘Absolutely,’ Olympic champion Monique Lamoureux told USA TODAY Sports on Tuesday.

Many talented squads have worn USA across their chests. There’s the 1998 team that clinched Olympic gold in the inaugural women’s competition in Nagano. The 2018 team topped the podium following a dramatic shootout in Pyeongchang, made possible by Lamoureux’s game-tying goal and her twin Jocelyne’s shootout winner.

But the 2026 U.S. women’s team could be the most complete squad we’ve seen on the Winter Olympics stage. The U.S. women have been unstoppable in their run to Thursday’s gold medal game against Canada. Depth is their superpower and they are firing on all cylinders, with nearly every player on the roster on the score sheet.

‘Everyone up and down the lineup is contributing,” said Lamoureux. ‘Sometimes you get a line that’s really hot at an Olympics or in a tournament and you really lean on that line, but to see them all performing at the same tournament… that’s really good to see.”

That’s not an exaggeration by any means. Team USA has outscored opponents, 31-1, through six games with 19 players registering at least one point. Fifteen players have found the back of the net. And offense isn’t the only thing rolling. USA’s three goalies have combined for five consecutive shutouts.

“Anytime I put on the jersey I just feel so lucky to be part of this group,” starting goalie Aerin Frankel said. ‘There’s so much talent in our locker room. It’s just so much fun to play with the best players in the world.”

What makes the U.S women’s hockey team the best we’ve ever seen? USA TODAY Sports asked three-time Olympic medalist Monique Lamoureux ahead of Thursday’s gold medal match.

Monique Lamoureux weighs in on Team USA

The U.S. women’s national team has numerous offensive threats, which will force Canada to pick your poison. Lamoureux said the reigning Olympic champions will likely look to shut down defender Caroline Harvey, who leads the ‘most offensively skilled defensive core from top to bottom that we’ve ever seen.’

Harvey is one of 11 players returning from the 2022 Beijing Games, where the U.S. settled for silver following a devastating 3-2 loss to Canada, the nation’s fourth runner-up finish to the Canadians at the Olympics. That’s a defeat that likely remains in the back of their heads. It’s not a loss that’s easy to get over, but it has served as fuel for their dominant run in Milan. 

‘When you lose at the Olympics, it’s unlike anything else when you have to watch the other team celebrate for 30 to 40 minutes before they bring the medals out,” Lamoureux told USA TODAY Sports. ‘That’s something that sticks with you. So I’m sure they’ve used it as motivation.”

Harvey walked away from Beijing with the most motivation. She made her Olympic debut at age 19 as the youngest member of Team USA in 2022, but her lack of ice time (only about a minute in total) deeply rattled her confidence. Harvey has responded in historic fashion and is now one of the best players on ice.

The 23-year-old senior at the University of Wisconsin leads all women at the Olympics with nine points — seven assists and two goals — marking a record for an American defender at the Olympics.

‘Really you can take that one of two ways… but to come back four years later and be one of the top, or if not the top player on the U.S. for this tournament, speaks to her character and just the people she surrounded herself with to put her in a position that she’s in now,’ Lamoureux said.

Harvey leads a young core of stars that represent both the present and future of the national team. While the veterans like five-time Olympian Hilary Knight and four-time Olympian Kendall Coyne Schofield  have anchored the team, the twelve players making Olympic debuts have infused youth into the lineup.

Seven players are still in college, but you wouldn’t be able to tell by their sheer production. The young stars are unphased by the moment and have successfully ‘made that jump from college or the pros to the international level,’ Lamoureux said, which isn’t easy despite how the U.S. rookies make it look.

‘Everyone tells you when you’re preparing (for the Olympics), prepare like any other tournament… Well, I feel like most people that tell you that have not been to the Olympics,’ added Lamoureux. ‘The pressure when you’re only there once every four years and the amount of eyes that are on you, it’s unlike anything else… It seems like they’re handling it very well and they’re managing everything very well.’

Lamoureux will have her eyes out for the second line of Hannah Bilka, Taylor Heise and Abbey Murphy on Thursday. Bilka was on the starting line for the first three games of the tournament, before moving to the second line ahead of USA’s 5-0 shutout of Canada Feb. 10. The move paid off as Bilka scored two of her four goals in the Canadian rout.

‘They’re just a bunch of spark plugs out there. They move fast, they’re creative, they play really hard and with an edge,’ Lamoureux said of the second line. ‘I know everyone’s talking about Abbey Murphy and how she plays with a chip on her shoulder and she gets under the other team’s skin. So I’d like to think that’s how my sister and I played when we were on the ice. So I love watching her play.’

Team USA’s three goalkeepers are also first-time Olympians, but have been solid in front of the net. Team USA conceded only one goal in its Olympic opener against Czechia, but has since kept opponents off the score sheet for the last 331:23 minutes of play. Frankel has recorded three of Team USA’s five shutouts, becoming the first goaltender in do so in women’s Olympic hockey.

Lamoureux praised Frankel’s skill ability to stay focused and engaged in front of the net.

‘She’s small for a goalie. So her athleticism and her ability to read plays, I think it is just at an elite level,’ Lamoureux said, pointing to her performance against Sweden on Monday. ‘(Frankel) had two shots in the first period and then in the second period she gets 13 shots. Those are not easy games to play in…Her and the other goalies have been ready at every step of the way.’

What to expect in USA vs. Canada gold medal match?

The USA-Canada women’s ice hockey rivalry is like no other in sports. Although the players taking the ice in Thursday’s gold-medal match have played together in the PWHL, Lamoureux said there will still be fireworks. The Americans shut out the Canada for the first time in Olympic history Feb. 10, further adding fuel to the flame, but the Canadians will have five-time Olympian Marie-Philip Poulin back in the lineup after injury.

‘When you’re putting on your country’s jersey and you’re going against Canada, there’s certainly no love lost,’ added Lamoureux, who expects a physical and heated matchup. ‘As far as offensive threats, the US definitely has a lot more of ’em for sure…We’re going to see some awesome hockey on Thursday.’

Team USA is one win away from securing its first gold medal since 2018, which would cap Hilary Knight’s prolific Olympic career with her fifth medal and second gold. Knight is one point and one goal away from setting all-time U.S. Olympic records. She’s also one medal away from the U.S. Olympic record.

‘It would be pretty amazing to see her top it off with one more gold medal,’ Lamoureux said. ‘Some people were kind of counting her out and saying she was past her prime… to see her continue to produce at an elite level and just to be able to sustain a career like that for so long is, I mean, there’s not that many people who’ve done it.’

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MILAN U.S. women’s hockey captain Hilary Knight is going for gold as the Americans prepare to face off against Canada on Thursday, but that’s not the only bling being dished out in Milan.

Knight proposed to U.S. speed-skater Brittany Bowe on Wednesday, Feb. 18, as both athletes compete at the 2026 Winter Olympics. It marks a full circle moment for the couple, who first met at the 2022 Beijing Winter Games.

‘Olympics brought us together. This one made us forever,’ Knight captioned an Instagram video of the proposal.

Knight and Bowe first connected at the Beijing Games amid strict COVID-19 protocols. The duo often went on fully masked strolls that were cute, but not necessarily romantic, Knight recalled. Bowe walked away with bronze in the 1000m in Beijing, but she told People that her time with Knight ‘was the biggest win coming out of Beijing.’

“(It was) a very unique way to meet someone, but it was also kind of cool because we felt like we were in this bubble,’ Bowe said. ‘No outside distractions. And we really had a lot of time just to get to know each other.” 

Knight and Bowe started dating in December 2022. Their relationship helped Knight find the strength to publicly come out a year later in 2023. Knight said they understand each other on a different level as two elite athletes with prolonged careers. Milano Cortina marks Knight’s fifth Games and Bowe’s fourth.

‘We have normal human conversations and then we have Olympic athlete conversations about tactical and technical parts of our training,’ Knight said at the USOPC media summit in October. ‘(Bowe’s) so intentional and thoughtful with preparation and it’s something that I hope that’s rubbed off on me in the right way. But it’s really incredible when you put two different sports side by side and see how they’re similar and how they’re different as well.’

There’s another ‘awesome’ perk of dating a fellow athlete watching sports all day long. ‘Whether it’s playoffs, regular season, we’re watching everything sports 24/7,’ Knight joked.

The 2026 Winter Olympic will mark the last Games for both Knight and Bowe. Bowe fell short of the podium with fourth-place finishes in both the women’s 1,000 meters and the women’s team pursuit. But Bowe will have another chance to medal on Friday in the women’s 1500m, a distance she previously held the world record in.

‘I gave it my best effort and left it all out there,’ Bowe said after the 1,000m race. ‘Obviously, tough finishing in what most would think is the hardest position in the Olympic games in fourth place. In the same breath, just such an honor to be able to be out there and my name continuing to be in that very elite pack of ladies.’

Meanwhile, Knight will lead Team USA in a gold-medal match against Canada on Thursday. Knight is one point and one goal away from setting an all-time U.S. Olympic hockey record.

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Kansas State basketball’s attempt to fire Jerome Tang for cause has been widely derided by the basketball world. After a 90-74 win over Baylor with interim coach Matthew Driscoll on the bench, the Wildcats still mentioned Tang several times postgame.

Kansas State arguably looked more complete than it has all season, with PJ Haggerty and Nate Johnson putting up 34 and 33 points, respectively.

‘We (came) more together as a team,’ Johnson told reporters postgame. ‘It just bonded us over that period of time, and it showed. His message still showed that we are still together and we’re just going to keep getting better every day.’

‘It’s been some very difficult days,’ Haggerty added. ‘Every day, we all love Coach T (Tang), you know, as a coach and as a person. He just wanted us to be better men rather than just basketball players, too. But at the end of the day, we’re just gonna keep playing and honoring him.’

Haggerty also harkened back to a mantra of Tang’s.

”Crazy faith’ is something he said every day, whether it was good days or bad days; he always stuck with faith,’ he said. ‘Either he had it on his shirt, or he said, ‘crazy faith,’ and that was the biggest thing that he always told us.’

This support lingers even after Tang’s firing for cause was justified by a press conference in which Tang derided his roster and said most of the players wouldn’t be back next season.

‘This was embarrassing,’ Tang said after a 91-62 loss at the hands of Cincinnati. ‘These dudes do not deserve to wear this uniform, and there will be very few of them in it next year. I’m embarrassed for the university, I’m embarrassed for our fans, and our student section. It’s just ridiculous.’

Even with those harsh words, Kansas State’s players are rallying behind him as he looks for the $18.675 million buyout he would be owed if Kansas State loses its case to fire him for cause.

Driscoll added: ‘Because of his leadership and because of what he did, that’s why tonight transpired, and it’s why everything came to fruition tonight. We went through a lot of things, but if you want to know something, there’s nothing easy in life, and nothing’s normal. Everyone wants it easy, and he said we’re not doing that.’

Clearly the players and new installation of coaches aren’t hoping to bolster the university’s case.

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CORTINA D’AMPEZZO, Italy — Take that, haters. Mikaela Shiffrin’s Olympic drought is over.

Shiffrin won gold in the slalom Wednesday, Feb. 18, her first medal since winning a silver in the combined at the 2018 Olympics in Pyeongchang. It snapped an 0-for-8 streak at the Winter Games, which included DNFs in three events four years ago.

‘It’s been so long that I’ve felt tired of questions that don’t feel like they line up with the reality of our sport. And in order to do this today, I kind of needed to accept the possibility that those questions would keep coming,’ Shiffrin said. ‘It was like, just don’t resist it. Just live in my own moment.’

It is Shiffrin’s second gold in the Olympic slalom and third overall, tying her with snowboarder Shaun White and bobsledder Kaillie Humphries for second-most golds by a U.S. Winter Olympian. Speedskaters Bonnie Blair and Eric Heiden each won five golds.

It’s also Shiffrin’s fourth overall Olympic medal, tying her with Julia Mancuso for most by a U.S. woman in Alpine skiing.

‘I have a challenged relationship with racing,’ said Shiffrin, who has always cared far more about the process than the result. ‘But when I get to do it like this today? Actually racing in that way, earning the race, that was wonderful.’

The American women finish the 2026 Milano Cortina Olympics with three Alpine skiing medals, matching their second-most at a single Winter Games. In addition to Shiffrin, Breezy Johnson won gold in the downhill, and Paula Moltzan and Jackie Wiles won bronze in the team combined.

It’s only the second time the U.S. women have claimed two Alpine golds at a single Games. They won golds in the giant slalom and slalom in 1952.

‘Everybody just showed up with so much courage and heart here, and I’m so proud to be part of this American team,’ Shiffrin said.

Shiffrin finished with a combined time of 1:39.10, 1.5 seconds ahead of Switzerland’s Camille Rast, who took silver, and 1.71 seconds ahead of Sweden’s Anna Swenn Larsson, who got bronze.

The gold was all but assured after Shiffrin’s blistering first run, which gave her a lead of 0.82 seconds over Germany’s Lena Duerr. To put in perspective how commanding that was, there was as much distance between Shiffrin and Duerr as there was between Duerr and Austria’s Katharina Truppe, who was 10th.

‘I knew Mikaela could ski rally fast on this kind of slope and I need to push really hard to beat her on this kind of slope,’ Rast said. ‘After the first run, I knew gold was gone but silver and bronze were open.’

This is the kind of dominance Shiffrin has shown week after week on the World Cup circuit, where she’s won seven of the first eight slaloms and been second in the other. She’s been so in command she wrapped up her ninth season slalom title before the Olympics.

But when Shiffrin struggled in the slalom portion of the team combined on Feb. 10, finishing 15th out of 18 skiers and dropping her and Breezy Johnson from first to fourth, it raised questions about whether the Olympics had become a mental hurdle following her struggles in the 2022 Beijing Games.

Shiffrin has more World Cup wins (108) and podiums (166) than any other skier, male or female, and she’s been in the top three in more than 55% of her starts. She’s the only skier in history to win a World Cup in each of skiing’s six disciplines – downhill, super-G, giant slalom, slalom, combined and parallel – and she has the single-season record for wins with 17.

Shiffrin also has three Olympic medals, two of them gold, won in her first two Winter Games.

Which is what made Beijing so out of character. Shiffrin didn’t finish a single tech run in an individual race. Her best individual result was ninth in the super-G.

But Shiffrin looked better in the giant slalom here, finishing 0.30 seconds off the podium. Afterward, she sounded optimistic about the upcoming slalom race.

“After the team combined, I went out and did a really wonderful session of training with my team, focusing on some of those variables that were really destabilizing,” Shiffrin said after the GS race.

‘No matter how many runs of slalom I do, it never gets easier. It only gets — you become more aware of how challenging it is,’ she added. ‘But it felt really good. It was great to practice and sort of take control of that.’

That carried over to race day.

When Shiffrin is on, she skis with a deceptive effortlessness. While other skiers seem to lunge from gate to gate, she flows. It’s not until you look at the splits, or her final time, that you realize how aggressively she’s been skiing to produce that kind of speed.

That was the case in the first run, when she came out blazing and never backed off. She had the fastest times in three of the four sections of the course, and was just 0.03 seconds off the pace in the other. When she crossed the finish line, she gave a pump of her fist.

It was more of the same in the second run.

‘Both runs were exactly what I wanted to feel overall,’ Shiffrin said. ‘Every time you get a little disturbance in the ski, just dive down into it more. And oftentimes I get through the finish and I’m just like, thank you for letting that work.’

Work it did. And now the haters will have to find someone else to criticize.

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The Mexico men’s national team has announced it will conclude World Cup preparations with matches against Ghana, Australia, and Serbia.

Mexico will serve as the World Cup co-host along with the United States and Canada, and will have the honor of opening the tournament when it faces South Africa on June 11 in Mexico City.

Prior to that match, El Tri will face Ghana on May 22 at a venue in Mexico yet to be confirmed.

Mexico will then take on Australia at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California on May 30 before concluding its warm-up matches against Serbia on June 4, also at a venue in Mexico yet to be confirmed.

Get tickets for Mexico vs. Australia

‘These are the ideal opponents to help prepare the national team for the World Cup,’ said Ivar Sisniega, president of the Mexican Football Federation.

Mexico went winless in six fall friendly matches (four draws and two losses), a major letdown after winning the Gold Cup over the summer.

Javier Aguirre’s side bounced back in January during a non-FIFA window, defeating Bolivia and Panama by 1-0 scorelines.

Before its three final World Cup tune-ups, Mexico will host Iceland on Feb. 25 in Querétaro and Portugal in Mexico City on March 28, before facing Belgium on March 31 in Chicago.

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Benfica winger Gianluca Prestianni has denied racially insulting Real Madrid star Vinícius Júnior during a Champions League match on Tuesday, Feb. 17.

Vinícius scored the game’s only goal in the 50th minute, but the match was marred by a confrontation between the Brazilian and Prestianni just five minutes later.

Prestianni covered his mouth with his jersey when approaching the 25-year-old, with nearby Real Madrid players signaling that the Argentine had made a racial insult.

Television footage appeared to show Vinícius telling referee François Letexier that Prestianni called him a “monkey.” Letexier halted the match for 11 minutes under FIFA’s anti-racism protocol, with Madrid clinching a 1-0 win after it resumed.

After the game, Vinícius wrote on Instagram: “Racists are, above all, cowards. They need to cover their mouths with their shirts to show how they are weak.’ 

But in a statement released on social media, Prestianni denied that he had racially abused Vinícius.

“I want to clarify that at no point did I direct racist insults at the player Vinicius Júnior, who unfortunately misinterpreted what he thought he heard,’ the 20-year-old said. ‘I have never been racist towards anyone and I regret the threats I received from Real Madrid players.”

Benfica has strongly backed its player, posting Prestianni’s statement along with the words: “Together, by your side.”

The Portuguese club added in a statement that Prestianni had been the victim of a ‘defamation campaign.’

“As the images show, given the distance, the Real Madrid players couldn’t have heard what they have been saying that they heard,” Benfica added.

UEFA has announced that it will open an investigation into the incident.

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